In Simpleton 's collection
Frank Brunner, Savage Sword of Conan 30 Page 9 - Comic Strip
436 

Savage Sword of Conan 30 Page 9

Comic Strip
Ink
Share

Description

Certainement plus connu pour son interprétation de Dr Strange et des débuts de Howard the Duck (respect !), Frank Brunner n'a, à ma connaissance et à part quelques illustrations, réalisé qu"une seule aventure de Conan. Oui, mais quelle aventure !

Cette somptueuse adaptation de "Scarlet Citadel" de R.E Howard est parue d'un seul tenant dans le N°30 de Savage Sword of Conan et a propulsé Frank Brunner au panthéon des grands illustrateurs du genre.

C'est bien simple, sur cette page, il donne tout. La densité, la profondeur de champ, la tension extrème sur chaque visage, la fureur et le bruit (vous, je ne sais pas, mais, moi, quand je regarde cette page, j'entends les épées qui s'entrechoquent...) et, surtout, la présence impressionnante de sauvagerie de Conan qui donne franchement l'impression qu'il va réussir à liquider l'armée ennemie à lui tout seul (spoiler : il va presque y parvenir !).

Cerise sur le gateau : c'est lorsque j'ai trouvé cette planche que j'ai pu mesurer à quel point la qualité de l'impression était médiocre dans les Marvel Magazines de l'époque. Croyez-moi, en live, c'est vraiment autre chose, par Crom !

7 comments
To leave a comment on that piece, please log in

About Frank Brunner

Frank Brunner studied at the New York University Film School and at the School of Visual Arts in New York City. He has worked as a magazine illustrator since the late 1960s (Win Magazine, I'll Be Damned). Around the same time, he did his first comics for Creepy magazine of Warren Publications. For Castle of Frankenstein, he also did a comics feature, called 'Smash Gordon'. He eventually got a job at Marvel, starting out as an inker on 'Tales of the Watcher' in 1969. He did several other jobs for Marvel, like 'Howard the Duck' stories with Steve Gerber, until he got a regular run on 'Dr Strange' with Steve Englehart in 1973. During the 1970s, Brunner was also a productive illustrator of paperback covers. He eventually focused on animation design (like on the 'X-Men' cartoon series) and fine art painting during the 1980s. As a cover artist, he was hired by Star Reach Productions and DC Comics. He additionally drew for Star-Reach titles like 'Star-Reach' and 'Quack'. In the 1980s, he appeared in Marvel's Epic Illustrated. He did graphic albums like 'Voyages' (Dragon's Teeth Productions) and 'Thieves' World Graphics' (Donning Publishing), and appeared in Eclipse titles like 'Alien Worlds'. In the mid-1980s, he was the artist of First Comics' title 'Warp'. Text (c) Lambiek